Centex Homes v. R-Help Construction Co., Inc. ( 2019 )


Menu:
  • Filed 3/11/19
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION *
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION SIX
    CENTEX HOMES,                           2d Civil No. B276708
    (Super. Ct. No. 56-2011-
    Cross-complainant and               00401979-CU-PO-VTA)
    Appellant,                                (Ventura County)
    v.
    R-HELP CONSTRUCTION
    COMPANY, INC.,
    Cross-Defendant and
    Appellant.
    A subcontractor is hired by a developer to install utility
    boxes in a subdivision. The subcontract contains a clause
    requiring the subcontractor to indemnify the developer for all
    claims arising out of the subcontractor’s work. [[The subcontract
    also contains a clause requiring the subcontractor to obtain
    insurance with the developer named as an insured.]]
    *Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1100 and 8.1110,
    this opinion is certified for partial publication. The portions of
    this opinion to be deleted from publication are identified as those
    portions between double brackets, e.g., [[/]].
    A plaintiff in an underlying tort action brings an action
    against the subcontractor and the developer for injuries allegedly
    arising from the subcontractor’s work. The subcontractor does
    not defend the developer.
    The trial court submits the question of the subcontractor’s
    duty to defend to a jury. The jury finds the plaintiff’s injuries
    were not caused by the subcontractor’s work. Does this end the
    matter? No.
    The end of the trial is not the end of the case. The parties
    are back to the beginning on the issue of duty to defend. Why?
    Where plaintiff in an underlying tort action alleges that his
    injuries arose out of the subcontractor’s work, the developer is
    entitled as a matter of law to a defense under the indemnity
    clause. It is error to submit the question of the subcontractor’s
    duty to defend to a jury. [[We also hold that the developer is
    entitled to a jury trial in its action for damages alleging breach of
    the covenant to provide insurance.]] We reverse and remand.
    FACTS
    Centex Homes (Centex) contracted with R-Help
    Construction Company, Inc. (R-Help) to trench, install and
    inspect all utility boxes and conduits for the Novella residential
    construction project in the City of Thousand Oaks (City). The
    contract required R-Help to defend and indemnify Centex for all
    claims “to the extent such Claim(s) in whole or in part arise out of
    or relate to” R-Help’s work. The contract provided for attorney
    fees incurred in enforcing the indemnity agreement. [[It also
    required R-Help to maintain a policy of liability insurance to
    cover such claims, with Centex named as an additional insured.]]
    Matthias Wagener filed a civil complaint against Southern
    California Edison and others alleging he was injured when he fell
    2.
    into a utility box. The complaint alleged that the defendants
    negligently managed, maintained, and inspected the utility box
    cover so as to create an unstable platform. Centex and R-Help
    were later added as Doe defendants.
    In answering R-Help’s interrogatories, Wagener stated: “It
    appears as though R-Help installed and thereafter abandoned the
    subject junction box or hand hole and adjoining conduit, having
    installed the lid without the prescribed bolts specifically designed
    to keep the SCE lid bolted to the junction box. Acting as
    Centex’[s] agent, R-Help and Centex are both jointly and
    severally liable to plaintiff for the injuries he suffered and
    damages he sustained.” (Italics omitted.)
    Centex tendered the complaint to R-Help for defense and
    indemnity. R-Help did not respond to the tender.
    Centex filed a cross-complaint against R-Help alleging
    causes of action for breach of contract, indemnity, and
    declaratory relief. Centex sought costs and expenses incurred in
    defending Wagener’s action and in enforcing the indemnity
    agreement.
    Eventually Centex obtained a dismissal of the Wagener
    action pursuant to a settlement. Wagener settled his action with
    the remaining defendants, leaving Centex’s cross-complaint
    against R-Help to be decided.
    Centex moved for summary adjudication contending that
    the allegations of Wagener’s complaint alone require R-Help to
    defend Centex under the indemnity agreement as a matter of
    law. R-Help moved for summary judgment contending
    undisputed evidence shows the utility box on which Wagener was
    injured is outside the scope of R-Help’s work under the
    subcontract. The trial court denied both motions.
    3.
    [[Centex’s cross-complaint against R-Help proceeded to
    trial on two issues: whether R-Help breached the contract by
    failing to obtain the required insurance, and whether R-Help has
    a duty to indemnity Centex for the costs of defending the
    Wagener action.]]
    After pretrial motions in limine, the trial court determined
    the question of indemnity is for the jury. [[The trial court also
    determined whether R-Help breached the contract by failing to
    obtain the required insurance is a question of law for the trial
    court. The court barred mention of insurance in the jury portion
    of the trial.]]
    Trial
    A Centex manager and an expert testified for Centex at
    trial.
    Jerry Domke was the senior land development manager for
    Centex. He has a degree in civil engineering and decades of
    experience working for public entities, private engineering firms,
    and real estate developers. He worked for Centex from 2003 to
    2007. He was involved in contracting for the Novella project.
    Domke testified that R-Help contracted to install all the utility
    boxes for the dry utilities; that is, telephone, electrical, and cable.
    The box on which Wagener was injured is shown on the City’s
    conduit plan, and is included in the scope of R-Help’s work under
    its subcontract. A change order adjusting the location of the box
    reflects that R-Help worked on it.
    Henry Koffman has a master’s degree in civil engineering
    and is professor of construction engineering and management at
    the University of Southern California. He testified the utility box
    on which Wagener was injured was on the plans for the project.
    It was on the City’s conduit plan. The box on which Wagener was
    4.
    injured was the same model box as another box installed on the
    project by R-Help. He said no one but R-Help would want to
    install a box at that location.
    Roberto Hurtado, president of R-Help, and the Novella
    project foreman inspected the subject utility box. They
    determined the box was not the work of R-Help and was not on
    the project’s plans. They concluded it was not within R-Help’s
    scope of work under the subcontract.
    The trial court instructed the jury: “R-HELP
    CONSTRUCTION CO. had a duty under the contract to defend
    and pay for the defense of CENTEX HOMES upon a tender of the
    defense if CENTEX proves that WAGENER’s alleged injuries, in
    whole or in part, arose out of or related to the work performed by
    R-HELP, unless the information available to both parties at the
    time of the tender eliminated any reasonable potential that the
    WAGENER claim arose out of or was related to R-HELP’s work.
    [¶] Whether the WAGENER claim against CENTEX and R-
    HELP succeeded is not determinative of the duty to defend.”
    Pursuant to the instruction, the trial court gave the jury a
    special verdict form that included the following questions:
    “Question No. 1: Did WAGENER allege that his injuries in whole
    or in part arose out of or were related to R-HELP’s work? [¶] . . .
    [¶] Question No. 2: Did the information available to both parties
    at the time of the tender eliminate any reasonable potential that
    the allegations in WAGENER’s claim arose out of or were related
    to R-HELP’s work?”
    The jury answered yes to both questions.
    The trial court found that R-Help did not breach the
    contract by failing to obtain insurance.
    The trial court entered judgment in favor of R-Help.
    5.
    Post Trial
    Centex moved for a new trial. [[The trial court determined
    that Centex was entitled to a new trial on R-Help’s duty to
    provide insurance. The court found that the record does not show
    Centex waived a jury on the issue. The court granted Centex a
    new trial without prejudice to R-Help’s argument that Centex
    had no right to a jury trial or that the issue has been mooted by
    the jury’s verdict.]] The trial court denied Centex’s motion for a
    new trial on the issue of indemnity. [[Both parties appeal.]]
    DISCUSSION
    Centex’s Appeal
    I
    Centex contends the trial court improperly delegated the
    duty to defend issue to the jury. It claims the issue is one of law
    for the court. We agree.
    Centex argues Wagener’s allegation that the utility box was
    within the scope of work R-Help performed for it is alone
    sufficient to require R-Help to defend. Centex relies on Crawford
    v. Weather Shield Mfg., Inc. (2008) 
    44 Cal. 4th 541
    . In Crawford,
    the developer of a residential project subcontracted with a
    window manufacturer to supply windows for the project. The
    subcontract required the window manufacturer to indemnity the
    developer against all claims arising out of the manufacturer’s
    work. Homeowners sued the developer alleging the windows
    manufactured by the subcontractor were faulty. The developer
    tendered defense to the manufacturer under the indemnity
    provisions in the subcontract. Our Supreme Court held that the
    duty to defend claims embraced by the indemnity agreement
    arises immediately upon the proper tender of defense, and thus
    before the litigation has determined whether indemnity is
    6.
    actually owed. (Id. at p. 558.) Claims on which a duty to defend
    is owed include those which at the time of tender allege facts that
    would give rise to a duty of indemnity. (Ibid.)
    Here Wagener claimed his injuries arose out of or related to
    R-Help’s work for Centex. Under Crawford, the duty to defend
    arose immediately upon the proper tender of defense of a claim
    embraced by the indemnity agreement. (Crawford v. Weather
    Shield Mfg., 
    Inc., supra
    , 44 Cal.4th at p. 558.) The duty to defend
    was not a question of fact for the jury; the trial court was
    compelled to determine as a matter of law that Wagener’s claim
    was embraced by the indemnity agreement.
    R-Help attempts to distinguish Crawford on the ground
    that there the question giving rise to indemnity was whether the
    window manufacturer was negligent. The resolution of that
    question lies in the underlying tort action. R-Help argues that
    here the question of the scope of work under the subcontract may
    be resolved independently of the underlying tort action. But the
    scope of work was an issue in the underlying tort action here, as
    was negligence in Crawford. Under Crawford, the duty to defend
    arises as a matter of law from the mere allegation in the
    underlying tort action that plaintiff’s injuries arose out of R-
    Help’s work.
    Crawford suggests that the obligation to defend may not
    continue “if the promisor . . . conclusively established that the
    claims were not among those ‘embraced by the indemnity.’”
    (Crawford v. Weather Shield Mfg., 
    Inc., supra
    , 44 Cal.4th at
    p. 558, fn. 7.) In Montrose Chemical Corp. v. Superior Court
    (1993) 
    6 Cal. 4th 289
    , 298, an insurance case on which both
    parties rely, our Supreme Court stated: “It would be pointless . . .
    to require an insurer to defend an action where undisputed facts
    7.
    developed early in the investigation conclusively showed, despite
    a contrary allegation in the complaint, that the underlying acts
    occurred on a date when the policy was not in effect or at a
    location concededly not covered by the policy.”
    But where the plaintiff’s complaint alleges facts embraced
    by the indemnity agreement, the indemnitor has a duty to defend
    throughout the underlying tort action unless it can conclusively
    show by undisputed facts that plaintiff’s action is not covered by
    the agreement.
    R-Help attempted to show conclusively by undisputed
    evidence in its motion for summary judgment that Wagener’s
    action was not covered by the indemnity agreement. R-Help
    failed to do so.
    R-Help’s reliance on Morlin Asset Management LP v.
    Murachanian (2016) 2 Cal.App.5th 184 is misplaced. In Morlin,
    plaintiff sued a landlord for injuries that occurred in the common
    area of an office building. Landlord cross-complained against a
    tenant under an indemnity agreement in the tenant’s lease. The
    tenant obtained summary judgment on the ground that under the
    indemnity clause he was only liable to indemnity for injuries that
    occurred within his suite, not the common area. The Court of
    Appeal affirmed.
    In Morlin, unlike this case, the allegations of the complaint
    in the underlying tort case were not embraced by the terms of the
    indemnity agreement. Moreover, the tenant in Morlin was able
    to show conclusively by undisputed evidence that the indemnity
    agreement did not apply. Here R-Help could not so demonstrate.
    Thus, the trial court denied R-Help’s motion for summary
    judgment.
    8.
    R-Help argues there is no substantial evidence that
    installation of the utility box was within its scope of work. R-
    Help attempts to support its argument by attacking the
    credibility of Centex’s witnesses.
    Centex’s development manager Domke is a civil engineer
    with decades of experience. He testified that R-Help contracted
    to install all the utility boxes for the project. He said the box on
    which Wagener was injured was within R-Help’s scope of work as
    shown on the City’s conduit plan and as reflected in a change
    order. Centex’s expert Koffman also testified that installation of
    the box was within R-Help’s scope of work.
    R-Help challenges Domke’s and Koffman’s testimony by
    pointing to the cross-examination tending to show that the box in
    question was not installed according to the City’s plans and
    specifications and had no function as installed. It is not unusual
    in the history of real estate development that someone who
    contracted to install an item failed to install it according to the
    plans and specifications so that it had no function as installed.
    None of the evidence elicited on cross-examination definitively
    shows the box was not within R-Help’s scope of work or that R-
    Help did not install the box. Domke’s and Koffman’s testimony
    constitutes substantial evidence that could be found credible by a
    reasonable trier of fact even though that did not happen here.
    In any event, it is too late to challenge the duty to defend
    after the underlying tort case has been resolved. Our Supreme
    Court stated in Scottsdale Insurance Co. v. MV Transportation
    (2005) 
    36 Cal. 4th 643
    , 655: “The defense duty arises upon tender
    of a potentially covered claim and lasts until the underlying
    lawsuit is concluded, or until it has been shown that there is no
    potential for coverage. [Citation.] When the duty, having arisen,
    9.
    is extinguished by a showing that no claim can in fact be covered,
    ‘it is extinguished only prospectively and not retroactively.’”
    We recognize that Scottsdale Insurance Co. is an insurance
    case, and that there are some differences in treatment between
    insurance policies and other indemnity agreements. (See
    Crawford v. Weather Shield Mfg., 
    Inc., supra
    , 44 Cal.4th at
    p. 552.) But R-Help cites no authority for a difference in
    treatment as it relates to the prospective application of the
    extinguishing of the duty to defend.
    It follows that the trial court’s jury instruction was
    erroneous. The court should have instructed that R-Help had a
    duty to defend and that it breached its duty. The only issue left
    for the jury would be damages.
    [[R-Help’s Appeal
    II
    R-Help contends it did not breach the subcontract by failing
    to obtain the required insurance policy.
    But the trial court found after a bench trial that R-Help did
    not breach its agreement to provide insurance for Centex. R-Help
    cannot seek review of a favorable ruling. (9 Witkin, Cal.
    Procedure (5th ed. 2008) Appeal, § 327, pp. 375-376.) R-Help can
    appeal, however, from the trial court’s order granting a new trial
    on the question of insurance. (See Liodas v. Sahadi (1977) 
    19 Cal. 3d 278
    , 285.)
    Here Centex brought an action for damages against R-
    Help, alleging R-Help breached its subcontract by failing to
    provide the required insurance. An action for damages arising
    from a breach of contract is an action at law entitling Centex to a
    jury trial. (Valley Crest Landscape Development, Inc. v. Mission
    Pools of Escondido, Inc. (2015) 
    238 Cal. App. 4th 468
    , 491-492.)
    10.
    R-Help argues that the interpretation of a written contract
    presents a question of law for the trial court. That is true unless
    the interpretation turns on the credibility of extrinsic evidence.
    (Parsons v. Bristol Development Co. (1965) 
    62 Cal. 2d 861
    , 865.)
    But R-Help’s argument misses the point. If within the context of
    a jury trial the trial court determines as a matter of law that R-
    Help did not breach the insurance provisions of the subcontract,
    the trial court may grant R-Help judgment of nonsuit or some
    other appropriate remedy. But R-Help cites no authority for the
    proposition that such a possibility deprives Centex of a jury trial
    in the first instance. (See Van de Kamp v. Bank of America
    (1988) 
    204 Cal. App. 3d 819
    , 863 [“Denial of the right to trial by
    jury is an act in excess of the court’s jurisdiction and is reversible
    error per se”].) The trial court points out that “[its] ruling is
    without prejudice to contentions by R-Help that there was no
    right to a jury trial on the insurance-procurement issue because
    it is a matter of contractual interpretation for the court, or that
    this issue has been mooted by the jury verdict.
    III
    R-Help contends the subcontract is one of adhesion and the
    provision for attorney fees for enforcement of the indemnity
    agreement is unconscionable.
    A contract of adhesion is a standardized contract, drafted
    and imposed by the party with superior bargaining power and
    which offers the subscribing party only the opportunity to accept
    or reject the contract. (Neal v. State Farm Ins. Cos. (1961) 
    188 Cal. App. 2d 690
    , 694.) A finding that a contract is one of adhesion
    does not mean it is invalid. (Intershop Communications AG v.
    Superior Court (2002) 
    104 Cal. App. 4th 191
    , 201.) The finding
    simply opens a second inquiry: whether a particular provision
    11.
    should be denied enforcement because it defeats the expectations
    of the weaker party or is unduly oppressive or unconscionable.
    (Ibid.)
    Here the trial court found that the subcontract was not one
    of adhesion. R-Help points out in a footnote that its expert
    testified Centex had the superior bargaining power. But R-Help
    points to no foundation for that opinion. In any event, the trial
    court was not required to find the testimony credible. (See
    Sprague v. Equifax, Inc. (1985) 
    166 Cal. App. 3d 1012
    , 1028 [trier
    of fact not required to believe even uncontradicted evidence].)
    Moreover, unequal bargaining power is not the only element of a
    contract of adhesion. R-Help points to no credible evidence that
    it could not have bargained for more favorable terms.
    Even if the subcontract were one of adhesion, it would still
    be enforceable. There is no evidence it defeated the expectations
    of the weaker party. R-Help’s president Hurtado testified he has
    been in the construction business for 46 years and has been
    involved with over 1,000 contracts. He read every page of the
    subcontract and he understood its terms. Nor is there anything
    about the subcontract’s indemnity clause, insurance clause or the
    attorney fee clause that is unduly oppressive or unconscionable.
    R-Help argues the attorney fee clause is unconscionable
    because it is unilateral. Under “Claim,” the subcontract provides
    for fees incurred “in enforcing this indemnity provision.” R-Help
    relies on Carmona v. Lincoln Millennium Car Wash, Inc. (2014)
    
    226 Cal. App. 4th 74
    , 88, for the proposition that unilateral
    attorney fees clauses are unconscionable and are not saved by
    Civil Code section 1717.
    Carmona is distinguishable. It involved a contract of
    adhesion for arbitration of employment disputes between car
    12.
    wash owners and their employees. Carmona did not involve a
    sophisticated party with 46 years in the contracting business. A
    provision that may be unconscionable in one context may not be
    unconscionable in another.
    R-Help argues the indemnity provision of the subcontract is
    unconscionable because Centex interprets it to mean the duty to
    defend exists even in the absence of a nexus between third party
    claims and R-Help’s work. In fact, Crawford shows Centex’s
    interpretation is correct. The duty to defend is broader than the
    duty to indemnify. (See Crawford v. Weather Shield Mfg., 
    Inc., supra
    , 44 Cal.4th at p. 558 [duty to defend does not depend on
    whether the litigation to be defended establishes a duty of
    indemnity].)
    Finally, R-Help claims the attorney fee provision is
    unconscionable because it places it in a worse position than an
    insurer. R-Help claims an insurer is not always liable for
    attorney fees incurred in enforcing the duty to defend. (Citing
    Brandt v. Superior Court (1985) 
    37 Cal. 3d 813
    , 820 [insurer liable
    for attorney fees in enforcing duty to defend where it has denied
    defense in bad faith].)
    But insurance policies typically do not contain attorney fee
    clauses. Attorney fee clauses are common in other types of
    contracts. There is no reason why they should not apply to the
    enforcement of indemnity agreements as well as other
    contractual provisions. That insurers and others whose contracts
    do not contain attorney fee clauses may not be similarly burdened
    does not mean such clauses are unconscionable.]]
    We reverse the judgment and remand. Centex is entitled to
    a new trial on the issue of damages for failure to defend.
    13.
    [[Centex is also entitled to a new trial on the issue of whether R-
    Help failed to obtain insurance.]] Costs are awarded to Centex.
    CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION.
    GILBERT, P. J.
    We concur:
    YEGAN, J.
    TANGEMAN, J.
    14.
    Vincent J. O'Neill, Jr., Judge
    Superior Court County of Ventura
    ______________________________
    Musick, Peeler & Garrett, LLP, Adam L. Johnson, Cheryl
    A. Orr for Cross-complainant and Appellant.
    Hayes, Scott, Bonino, Ellingson, Guslani, Simonson &
    Clause, LLP, Mark G. Bonino, Charles Tillage; Law Offices of
    Jamie Skeeba, Mark Santa Romana for Cross-defendant and
    Appellant.
    15.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B276708

Filed Date: 3/11/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/11/2019